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Saturday, 28 March 2015

There is a note window popup when we click on signup to join FanBox. The note is given below that asks new member to enter an activation code to signup.

Due to overwhelming demand, we can only accept new members by invitation. Please request an invitation from a friend who is already a member.

NOTE — The best way to get invited is to post a request to your Facebook or Twitter.

This is because currently fanbox has closed registration, any of your friend who is earning from fan can invite you and then you can create account. The procedure is quite easy and without any hurdles.

If you have activation code then you can join FanBox and can earn money as much as you can.

If you want activation code for FanBox signup, comment here or join our Facebook Fanpage(activation codes are updated many times in a day).

Thursday, 26 March 2015

The network’s developers describe tsu as a “free social network and payment platform.” tsu’s invite-only policy aims to encourage existing users to grow their online community, or “family tree.” For example, say user 1 invites user 2 to join tsu. If user 2 decides to join, user 1 gets paid. Then, if users 2 decides to stay and invites user 3 to check out tsu, both user 2 and user 1 get paid—and so on.
To signup on Tsu you need an invitation by a person who is already a part of Tsu.

Tsu is an online social networking service headquartered in New York, New York.

Like Facebook, after registering to use the site, users may create a personal profile, add other users as friends, exchange messages, post status updates and photos, and receive notifications when others update their profiles. Tsu pays you on what you do on your profile, like if you post something on your Tsu profile same as you do on facebook, comment or like someone's post. Tsu differentiates itself from competitors by allowing its users to maintain ownership of the content they post.

Tsu has been rapidly gaining ground since its late October launch. The key to tsu’s growth is not a backlash against mainstream social networks— but the fact that tsu encourages their users’ activity on the social network with monetary rewards.

The payments don’t stop there. Users are also encouraged to share photo, video and text content that garners pageviews from their social media audience—all typical behavior for social networks. What makes tsu different from other social media giants is that the network only takes 10 percent of ad revenue generated by advertisements placed on the users’ pages. The other 90 percent is divided among the content creator, who gets 45%, and the other 45% is distributed among that user’s “family tree”—essentially operating on a multi-level marketing model. Successful users can cash their earnings once they amount to $100.

While the idea of getting paid for being a social media guru is attractive (just think of how much you could earn on your engagement announcement!), there are mixed feelings associated with a network that pays you to post. The Times’article on Tsu discusses the risk of the new network propagating the model where only those already at the top reap the most rewards—the same kind of social media influencers who make profit from their social media presence and have a large following elsewhere would be the ones making the most money on tsu.